Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 16, Issue 1 - Volume 17, Issue 2Department of Archaeology, 1999 - Archaeology |
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However , I did not feel justified in making crude assumptions about innate death rates and could find no figures for these because very few unmanaged ibex populations survive and so no one knows what death rates would look like if the ...
However , I did not feel justified in making crude assumptions about innate death rates and could find no figures for these because very few unmanaged ibex populations survive and so no one knows what death rates would look like if the ...
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... death rates are likely to be low . As n rises to about 5 , mean natural death rate also rises and thereafter drifts gradually up towards 11 % with increasing n . Clearly , 0.3 is too high a value for the upper bound of DEATH , 0.15 ...
... death rates are likely to be low . As n rises to about 5 , mean natural death rate also rises and thereafter drifts gradually up towards 11 % with increasing n . Clearly , 0.3 is too high a value for the upper bound of DEATH , 0.15 ...
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... death of old , unsuccessful genotypes . As annual birth and death rates approach zero , the genetic throughput of the system is curtailed and evolution will slow to a standstill . A single series of terminal states for n between 0.1 and ...
... death of old , unsuccessful genotypes . As annual birth and death rates approach zero , the genetic throughput of the system is curtailed and evolution will slow to a standstill . A single series of terminal states for n between 0.1 and ...
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analysis Animal Bones antler approach archaeological record Archaeological Review Archaeological Science archaeozoology argue artefacts assemblages behaviour body British burial butchery practices Cambridge University Press Castellón Çatalhöyük cemetery chaîne opératoire changes complex context death rates Department of Archaeology deposits discussion distal dogs environment environmental ethnic Europe evidence example excavation exploitation faunal remains figures funerary Godmanchester groups handaxe Hodder human remains hunter-gatherer important individual infanticide infants interaction interpretation Journal landscape Late Mesolithic lithic London Magdalenian Mary Baxter material culture meaning Mesolithic microliths middens Molleson mortality natural Neolithic objects occupation Oxford palaeopathology paper past patterns perspective post-processual Poundbury problems Radius recognised red deer Review from Cambridge ritual rock-art Roman Britain Rowley-Conwy samples seasonality settlement skeletal skeletons social relations specific Star Carr statuettes structure studies suggested symbolic taphonomy taskscape techniques theoretical theory Tilley upland Upper Palaeolithic Vale of Pickering volume Zvelebil